EP2717468A1 - Area efficient single capacitor CMOS relaxation oscillator - Google Patents

Area efficient single capacitor CMOS relaxation oscillator Download PDF

Info

Publication number
EP2717468A1
EP2717468A1 EP12368029.0A EP12368029A EP2717468A1 EP 2717468 A1 EP2717468 A1 EP 2717468A1 EP 12368029 A EP12368029 A EP 12368029A EP 2717468 A1 EP2717468 A1 EP 2717468A1
Authority
EP
European Patent Office
Prior art keywords
voltage
terminal
source
node
capacitive element
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Withdrawn
Application number
EP12368029.0A
Other languages
German (de)
French (fr)
Inventor
Tim Morris
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Dialog Semiconductor GmbH
Original Assignee
Dialog Semiconductor GmbH
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Dialog Semiconductor GmbH filed Critical Dialog Semiconductor GmbH
Priority to EP12368029.0A priority Critical patent/EP2717468A1/en
Priority to US13/644,490 priority patent/US8970313B2/en
Publication of EP2717468A1 publication Critical patent/EP2717468A1/en
Withdrawn legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03KPULSE TECHNIQUE
    • H03K3/00Circuits for generating electric pulses; Monostable, bistable or multistable circuits
    • H03K3/02Generators characterised by the type of circuit or by the means used for producing pulses
    • H03K3/023Generators characterised by the type of circuit or by the means used for producing pulses by the use of differential amplifiers or comparators, with internal or external positive feedback
    • H03K3/0231Astable circuits
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03KPULSE TECHNIQUE
    • H03K3/00Circuits for generating electric pulses; Monostable, bistable or multistable circuits
    • H03K3/02Generators characterised by the type of circuit or by the means used for producing pulses
    • H03K3/353Generators characterised by the type of circuit or by the means used for producing pulses by the use, as active elements, of field-effect transistors with internal or external positive feedback
    • H03K3/354Astable circuits
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03KPULSE TECHNIQUE
    • H03K4/00Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions
    • H03K4/06Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions having triangular shape
    • H03K4/08Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions having triangular shape having sawtooth shape
    • H03K4/48Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions having triangular shape having sawtooth shape using as active elements semiconductor devices
    • H03K4/50Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions having triangular shape having sawtooth shape using as active elements semiconductor devices in which a sawtooth voltage is produced across a capacitor
    • H03K4/501Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions having triangular shape having sawtooth shape using as active elements semiconductor devices in which a sawtooth voltage is produced across a capacitor the starting point of the flyback period being determined by the amplitude of the voltage across the capacitor, e.g. by a comparator
    • H03K4/502Generating pulses having essentially a finite slope or stepped portions having triangular shape having sawtooth shape using as active elements semiconductor devices in which a sawtooth voltage is produced across a capacitor the starting point of the flyback period being determined by the amplitude of the voltage across the capacitor, e.g. by a comparator the capacitor being charged from a constant-current source

Definitions

  • This invention relates generally to the field of electronic circuits and relates in particular to relaxation oscillators...
  • a relaxation oscillator is an oscillator based upon the behavior of a physical system's return to equilibrium after being disturbed. That is, a dynamical system within the oscillator continuously dissipates its internal energy. Normally the system would return to its natural equilibrium; however, each time the system reaches some threshold sufficiently close to its equilibrium, a mechanism disturbs it with additional energy. Hence, the oscillator's behavior is characterized by long periods of dissipation followed by short impulses. The period of the oscillations is set by the time it takes for the system to relax from each disturbed state to the threshold that triggers the next disturbance.
  • a principal object of the present invention is to achieve a relaxation oscillator requiring minimum chip-area.
  • a further object of the present invention is to achieve a reliable duty-cycle of the oscillator.
  • CMOS oscillators requiring minimal silicon area and enabled to operate at low frequencies and for small technology nodes.
  • the method disclosed comprises, firstly, the steps of: (1) providing a relaxation oscillator comprising only one capacitive element, a comparator, a logic circuitry, four switching means, connected between a reference voltage and a virtual ground voltage, (2) implementing a CMOS switching network allowing nodes at a first and a second terminal of the capacitive element to rise and fall between positive and negative potentials with respect to ground supply, without causing leakage to substrate or risk of latch-up, and (3) starting a first of two symmetrical phases wherein a node at a first terminal of the capacitive element is switched to the virtual ground voltage and a node at a second terminal of the capacitive element is charged to the reference voltage.
  • the oscillator disclosed firstly comprises: one capacitive element only, one current source only wherein a first terminal is connected to VDD voltage and a second terminal is connected to a switching network, and a threshold detection unit to determine when a node of the capacitive element exceeds a given threshold voltage.
  • the oscillator comprises a logic circuitry triggered by the voltage threshold detector to swap between two operation phases, and the switching network to alternate between two phases of operation comprising a number of CMOS switches, wherein the switching network is configured to operate the oscillator in the two phases, where in a first phase a node at a first terminal of the capacitive element is switched to a virtual ground voltage and a node at a second terminal of the capacitive element is charged to a reference voltage, and in a second phase, when the node at the second terminal of the capacitive element reaches a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage equal to the reference voltage, the node at the second terminal is switched to the virtual ground voltage and the node at the first terminal of the capacitive element is charged up to a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage equal of the reference voltage.
  • the preferred embodiments of the present disclosure teaches methods and circuits to achieve CMOS relaxation oscillators requiring minimal chip space and provide a reliable duty cycle.
  • Fig. 1 shows a first embodiment of a relaxation oscillator in CMOS technology utilizing 2 capacitive elements C1 and C2, which are charged and discharged in alternating phases.
  • the voltage across the capacitive element in the charged state is equal to some reference voltage which is typically bounded by the positive voltage supply for the circuit.
  • the voltage across the capacitive element in the discharged state is typically zero.
  • a network of switches S1-S4 support the oscillation of the circuit shown in Fig. 1 , Switches S1 and S4 close in phase ⁇ 1, Switches S2 and S3 close in phase ⁇ 2.
  • a current source 1 provides the power to charge the capacitors periodically.
  • Fig. 1 The disadvantages of the circuit of Fig. 1 include, but are not limited to, the following:
  • Fig. 2 shows an improved embodiment of the present disclosure overcoming the drawbacks outlined above.
  • the circuit of Fig. 2 is configured to enable low frequency clocks and smaller technology nodes ( ⁇ 250 nm) due to lower supply voltage.
  • the capacitor is usually formed by parallel metal plates separated by a dielectric layer of very well controlled thickness.
  • An example is when 2 of the metal routing layers are used to form a "MIM-cap" (a Metal-Insulator-Metal capacitor).
  • MIM-cap a Metal-Insulator-Metal capacitor.
  • MOM-caps Metal-Oxide-Metal capacitors
  • MOM-caps provide higher capacitance per unit area.
  • MOM-caps also have very good temperature independence, so which one is used would just depend on which provides best area efficiency.
  • An external capacitor may also be used alternatively but at the expense of (1) extra pins on the chip which are usually limited and (2) extra bill-of-materials and a capacitor uses PCB space, thus creating higher expense.
  • the oscillator operates in two symmetrical phases, whereby in phase one ( ⁇ 1,) the RMP_L node of the capacitive element is switched to vss and the RMP_R node is charged up to the reference voltage.
  • phase one ⁇ 1
  • the RMP_L node of the capacitive element is switched to vss and the RMP_R node is charged up to the reference voltage.
  • phase two ⁇ 2
  • the RMP-_R node of the capacitive element is switched to vss and the RMP_L node is charged up to a potential with respect to vss equal to the reference voltage.
  • a voltage comparator switches and some logic circuitry is triggered to swap the phase to phase one and so the cycle is repeated.
  • Fig. 8 shows a basic block diagram comprising the oscillator 80, threshold detection circuit 81 as e.g. a comparator, and the logic circuitry 82 swapping between the two phases.
  • Essential to the design of the circuits of Fig. 2 and Fig. 4 disclosed are one current source 40, the switching network (detailed example implementation shown in Fig. 4 ), and the single capacitive element C1. Also essential to the design is some kind of voltage threshold detector (not shown in Fig. 4 ) which detects when RMP_L or RMP_R nodes exceed a given threshold voltage with respect to voltage vss, and which then stimulates the switching of the circuit phase (between phases ⁇ 1 and ⁇ 2).
  • circuit disclosed only makes sense when a single capacitive element is used.
  • the switching network of Fig. 4 of the oscillator allows the RMP_L and RMP_R nodes to rise and fall between V+ and V- (as shown in Fig. 3 ), i.e. positive and negative potentials with respect to ground supply, without causing leakage to substrate or risk of latch-up, i.e. the inadvertent creation of a low-impedance path.
  • the other requirement is that during ⁇ 1 the RMP_R node is connected to the current source 40 and isolated from all other current paths while the RMP_L node is connected to ground (vss in Fig. 4 ).
  • the RMP_L node is connected to the current source 40 and isolated from all other current paths while the RMP_R node is connected to ground ( vss in Fig. 4 ).
  • the example switching network in Fig. 4 does satisfy these requirements, although it would be possible to envisage a different switching network for this function.
  • the current source transistor 40 and transistor switches 41, 42, 43 and 44 are PMOS transistors.
  • Transistor switches 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, and 490 are NMOS switches with local p-wells isolated from the chip p-type substrate by an n-well (triple well process) as noted above. It should be noted that the circuit of Fig. 4 is using one current source 40 only.
  • the bulk of any PMOS transistor can either be attached as shown, or can be attached to the positive supply, or any voltage higher than the positive supply.
  • phase ⁇ 1 transistor switches 41, 44, 47, and 48 are closed.
  • Transistor switches 42, 43 , 45, and 490 are closed in phase ⁇ 2.
  • the lines above ⁇ 1 or ⁇ 2 in Figs. 4 , and 6a -b refer to the polarity of the signal. Therefore ⁇ 1 always means that a transistor is closed in phase 1 - if there is a line above the ⁇ 1 this means the voltage will be low during phase 1 (required to close a PMOS during phase 1), whereas if there is no line above the ⁇ 1 this means the voltage will be high during phase 1 (required to close an NMOS during phase 1).
  • Figs 6a and 6b show switching networks both also configured to enable low frequency clocks and smaller technology ( ⁇ 250nm) due to lower supply voltage. Both circuits of Figs 6a and 6b are using one current source 40 only and one capacitive element C1 only.
  • the circuit of Fig. 6a has two diodes or other rectifying means 60 and 61.
  • transistor switches 62 and 63 shown in Fig. 6a are NMOS switches having local p-wells isolated from the chip p-type substrate by an n-well (triple well process). It should be noted that the local p-wells may be advantageous in regard of performance but they are not essential to the design of the switching network disclosed.
  • the bulk of NMOS transistor switches 62 and 63 may be each connected to their source or to their substrate.
  • Transistor switches 66 and 67 shown in Fig. 6a are PMOS switches
  • Fig. 6a the 2 diodes 60 and 61 are used to ensure that significant current does not flow through the body diode of the transistors when RMP_L or RMP_R go negative with respect to VSS.
  • Transistor switches 64, 65, 68 and 69 shown in Fig. 6b are PMOS switches.
  • PMOS transistor switches 64 and 65 may have local n-wells tied to the positive supply V+. Their bulks are connected to V+ (positive supply).
  • the diodes, illustrated with PMOS switches 64 and 65 are parasitic body diodes of the PMOS transistors 64 and 65 that are present in the CMOS process. They were intended/included to show that there is no current path opened when the RMP_L or RMP_R nodes go negative.
  • PMOS switches 64 and 65 cannot be turned on as efficiently as NMOS transistors (they can only pull RMP_L and RMP_R nodes down to a threshold voltage Vt above VSS) but they guarantee no significant current path through their body diodes when RMP_L or RMP_R nodes go negative with respect to VSS.
  • the bulk of any PMOS transistor can either be attached as shown, or can be attached to the positive supply, or any voltage higher than the positive supply.
  • the switching networks of the oscillators illustrated in Fig. 4 , 6a and 6b implement a principle of allowing ends of the single capacitor to go temporarily below ground supply. Moreover it should be noted that all components of the oscillators illustrated in Fig. 4 , 6a and 6b may be integrated in one chip.
  • the oscillators illustrated in Fig. 2 , 6a and 6b could be used e.g. for a low frequency oscillator, i.e. low-power mode chip operation, running digital with very slow backup clock to allow shutting down main high-frequency oscillator; or replacing high accuracy quartz oscillator signal in case of external clock supply being removed and main chip still requiring good accuracy clock - possibly 32,768Hz.
  • Step 72 shows starting a first of two symmetrical phases wherein a node at a first terminal of the capacitive element is switched to the virtual ground voltage and a node at a second terminal of the capacitive element is charged to the reference voltage.
  • Step 73 depicts starting a second of the two symmetrical phases when the node at the second terminal of the capacitive element reaches a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage equal to the reference voltage, wherein in the second phase the node at the second terminal is switched to the virtual ground voltage and the node at the first terminal of the capacitive element is charged up to a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage to a potential equal of the reference voltage.
  • Step 74 discloses going back to step 72 when the node of the first terminal reaches the reference voltage with respect to the virtual ground and repeat a cycle of the first and the second phases.

Landscapes

  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Power Engineering (AREA)
  • Semiconductor Integrated Circuits (AREA)
  • Inductance-Capacitance Distribution Constants And Capacitance-Resistance Oscillators (AREA)

Abstract

Methods and circuits for CMOS relaxation oscillators are disclosed. A single capacitive element, a single current source and a switching network are utilized. A switching network of the oscillator allows both nodes of the capacitive element to rise and fall between a positive and a negative voltage with respect to ground supply, without causing leakage to substrate or risk of latch-up, i.e. the inadvertent creation of a low-impedance path. The oscillator requires minimum silicon area, has an improved duty cycle, is particular useful for implementing lower frequency clocks and is enabled for smaller technology nodes, lower than 250 nm, due to lower supply voltage.

Description

    Technical field
  • This invention relates generally to the field of electronic circuits and relates in particular to relaxation oscillators...
  • Background Art
  • A relaxation oscillator is an oscillator based upon the behavior of a physical system's return to equilibrium after being disturbed. That is, a dynamical system within the oscillator continuously dissipates its internal energy. Normally the system would return to its natural equilibrium; however, each time the system reaches some threshold sufficiently close to its equilibrium, a mechanism disturbs it with additional energy. Hence, the oscillator's behavior is characterized by long periods of dissipation followed by short impulses. The period of the oscillations is set by the time it takes for the system to relax from each disturbed state to the threshold that triggers the next disturbance.
  • It is a challenge for designers of CMOS relaxation oscillators to design circuits, which require minimal chip area, a reliable duty cycle, and a low minimum frequency.
  • Summary of the invention
  • A principal object of the present invention is to achieve a relaxation oscillator requiring minimum chip-area.
  • A further object of the present invention is to achieve a reliable duty-cycle of the oscillator.
  • A further object of the present invention is that the switching network of the oscillator does not cause leakage to substrate or a risk of latch-up, i.e. the inadvertent creation of a low-impedance path.
  • In accordance with the objects of this disclosure a method to achieve CMOS oscillators requiring minimal silicon area and enabled to operate at low frequencies and for small technology nodes have been disclosed. The method disclosed comprises, firstly, the steps of: (1) providing a relaxation oscillator comprising only one capacitive element, a comparator, a logic circuitry, four switching means, connected between a reference voltage and a virtual ground voltage, (2) implementing a CMOS switching network allowing nodes at a first and a second terminal of the capacitive element to rise and fall between positive and negative potentials with respect to ground supply, without causing leakage to substrate or risk of latch-up, and (3) starting a first of two symmetrical phases wherein a node at a first terminal of the capacitive element is switched to the virtual ground voltage and a node at a second terminal of the capacitive element is charged to the reference voltage. Furthermore the method disclosed comprises: (4) starting a second of the two symmetrical phases when the node at the second terminal of the capacitive element reaches a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage equal to the reference voltage, wherein in the second phase the node at the second terminal is switched to the virtual ground voltage and the node at the first terminal of the capacitive element is charged up to a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage equal of the reference voltage; and (5) going back to step (3) when the node of the first terminal reaches the reference voltage with respect to the virtual ground and repeat a cycle of the first and the second phases.
  • In accordance with the objects of this disclosure a CMOS relaxation oscillator requiring minimal silicon area and enabled to operate at low frequencies and for small technology nodes below 250 nm has been achieved, The oscillator disclosed firstly comprises: one capacitive element only, one current source only wherein a first terminal is connected to VDD voltage and a second terminal is connected to a switching network, and a threshold detection unit to determine when a node of the capacitive element exceeds a given threshold voltage. Furthermore the oscillator comprises a logic circuitry triggered by the voltage threshold detector to swap between two operation phases, and the switching network to alternate between two phases of operation comprising a number of CMOS switches, wherein the switching network is configured to operate the oscillator in the two phases, where in a first phase a node at a first terminal of the capacitive element is switched to a virtual ground voltage and a node at a second terminal of the capacitive element is charged to a reference voltage, and in a second phase, when the node at the second terminal of the capacitive element reaches a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage equal to the reference voltage, the node at the second terminal is switched to the virtual ground voltage and the node at the first terminal of the capacitive element is charged up to a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage equal of the reference voltage.
  • Description of the drawings
  • In the accompanying drawings forming a material part of this description, there is shown:
    • Fig. 1 shows a basic diagram of a relaxation oscillator (comparator and logic not shown).
    • Fig. 2 illustrates a basic diagram of an improved relaxation oscillator (comparator and logic not shown) configured to enable low frequency clocks and smaller technology (<250nm) due to lower supply voltage.
    • Fig. 3 illustrates the clock generation
    • Fig. 4 depicts an example of the switching network disclosed
    • Fig. 5 shows an example of isolated NMOS transistors in a deep n-well on a p-substrate as utilized in the switching network of Fig. 4
    • Fig. 6a shows a second embodiment of an oscillator (comparator and logic not shown) with a switching network also configured to enable low frequency clocks and smaller technology (<250nm) due to lower supply voltage.
    • Fig. 6b shows a third embodiment of an oscillator (comparator and logic not shown) with a switching network also configured to enable low frequency clocks and smaller technology (<250nm) due to lower supply voltage.
    • Fig. 7 illustrates a flowchart of a method to achieve oscillators requiring minimal silicon area and enabled to operate at low frequencies and for small technology nodes.
    • Fig. 8 shows a basic block diagram comprising the oscillator 80, the comparator 81 and the logic circuitry 82 swapping between the phases.
    Description of the preferred embodiments
  • The preferred embodiments of the present disclosure teaches methods and circuits to achieve CMOS relaxation oscillators requiring minimal chip space and provide a reliable duty cycle.
  • Fig. 1 shows a first embodiment of a relaxation oscillator in CMOS technology utilizing 2 capacitive elements C1 and C2, which are charged and discharged in alternating phases. The oscillator half-period is defined by the time taken to charge a first capacitive element from its discharged state (Q=0) to its charged state (Q=CV). The voltage across the capacitive element in the charged state is equal to some reference voltage which is typically bounded by the positive voltage supply for the circuit. The voltage across the capacitive element in the discharged state is typically zero.
  • A network of switches S1-S4 support the oscillation of the circuit shown in Fig. 1 , Switches S1 and S4 close in phase ϕ1, Switches S2 and S3 close in phase ϕ2. A current source 1 provides the power to charge the capacitors periodically.
  • The disadvantages of the circuit of Fig. 1 include, but are not limited to, the following:
    • Only one capacitor is utilized per half-period, the other serves no useful purpose and therefore represents an inefficient use of area.
    • The duty-cycle is affected by any capacitor mismatch.
    • The minimum oscillator frequency is bounded by the maximum capacitor size (area constraint), minimum charging current (performance / reliability), and maximum supply voltage (limited by technology and system):
    • The frequency of the oscillator follows the equations f = l / (C x V), wherein I is charging current from the current source 1, C is the total capacitance of both capacitors, and V is the voltage at which the capacitor is considered as fully charged.
  • Clearly lower frequency requires lower current, larger capacitance, and/or higher voltage.
  • Fig. 2 shows an improved embodiment of the present disclosure overcoming the drawbacks outlined above. The circuit of Fig. 2 is configured to enable low frequency clocks and smaller technology nodes (<250 nm) due to lower supply voltage.
  • The oscillator of Fig. 2 converts a constant or programmable current source 1 and a constant or programmable voltage reference into a fixed or programmable clock frequency. The oscillator utilizes the current source 1, a single capacitive element C1 and four switching elements S1-S4 to sequentially charge both ends of the capacitor up to the level of the voltage reference. The switching elements could be implemented by e.g. transistors
  • The comparator (which is used to detect when one of the sides of the capacitor has reached the reference) is usually supplied by VDD also, which means that the preferred reference will be lower than VDD, because some headroom is required for the current source 1. The reference voltage is usually derived from a bandgap reference voltage to ensure it stays constant for different temperatures.
  • For best frequency performance the capacitor is usually formed by parallel metal plates separated by a dielectric layer of very well controlled thickness. An example is when 2 of the metal routing layers are used to form a "MIM-cap" (a Metal-Insulator-Metal capacitor). These capacitors have very good temperature independence, so the frequency can be also independent from temperature by using MIM-caps. In technology nodes of 130nm and below, the area efficiency of MOM-caps (Metal-Oxide-Metal capacitors) becomes comparable to that of MIM-caps (approximately same capacitance per unit area). Below 130nm, MOM-caps provide higher capacitance per unit area. MOM-caps also have very good temperature independence, so which one is used would just depend on which provides best area efficiency.
  • An external capacitor may also be used alternatively but at the expense of (1) extra pins on the chip which are usually limited and (2) extra bill-of-materials and a capacitor uses PCB space, thus creating higher expense.
  • The oscillator operates in two symmetrical phases, whereby in phase one (ϕ1,) the RMP_L node of the capacitive element is switched to vss and the RMP_R node is charged up to the reference voltage. When RMP_R reaches a potential with respect to vss equal to the reference voltage a voltage comparator switches and some logic circuitry is triggered to swap the phase to phase two. In phase two (ϕ2) the RMP-_R node of the capacitive element is switched to vss and the RMP_L node is charged up to a potential with respect to vss equal to the reference voltage. When RMP-_L reaches the reference voltage a voltage comparator switches and some logic circuitry is triggered to swap the phase to phase one and so the cycle is repeated.
  • Fig. 8 shows a basic block diagram comprising the oscillator 80, threshold detection circuit 81 as e.g. a comparator, and the logic circuitry 82 swapping between the two phases.
  • Returning to Fig. 2 , at a time immediately before the start of phase one, the potential (VRMP_L - VRMP_R) = (Vreference - Vvss). At the start of phase one the RMP_L node is switched to vss but the charge stored in the capacitive element C1 remains, therefore the potential (VRMP_R - VVSS) = (VVSS-VReference).
  • During phase one the node RMP_R is charged up relative to VVSS at a rate of dV/dt = Isource/CC1 (Volts/seconds), wherein CC1 is the capacitance of the capacitive element C1.
  • The RMP_R node must increase to satisfy (VRMP_R - Vvss) = (VReference - Vvss) in order to trigger the next phase, therefore the voltage delta required, dV = 2 x (VReference - Vvss). The charging time for one phase is then d1 = (dV x CC1) / ISource. The oscillator frequency is derived from two symmetrical phases, f = ISource/ (4 x CC1 x VReference); wherein Vvss is assumed = 0.
  • Fig. 3 illustrates the clock generation of the circuit disclosed. It shows how the voltages of the nodes RMP_R and RMP_L periodically rise and fall according a period T = ϕ1 + ϕ2, i.e. the frequency of the oscillator is 1/T. The voltages rises with a speed of dv/dt = I/C.
  • In comparison with the circuit shown in Fig. 1 , the new architecture reduces the oscillator frequency by a factor of 4 considering that the same current, total capacitance, and reference voltage are used: f = I 4 xCxV
    Figure imgb0001

    wherein I is the charging current, C is the total capacitance of the single capacitive element, e.g. a capacitor, V is the voltage at which the capacitive element is considered to be fully charged.
  • Clearly the same frequency as obtained by the circuit shown in Fig. 1 can be obtained using the new architecture by using a 4x higher charging current, ¼ capacitor area, or ¼ voltage reference.
  • Essential to the design of the circuits of Fig. 2 and Fig. 4 disclosed are one current source 40, the switching network (detailed example implementation shown in Fig. 4 ), and the single capacitive element C1. Also essential to the design is some kind of voltage threshold detector (not shown in Fig. 4 ) which detects when RMP_L or RMP_R nodes exceed a given threshold voltage with respect to voltage vss, and which then stimulates the switching of the circuit phase (between phases ϕ1 and ϕ2).
  • An example of the required switching network implemented in a triple-well P-substrate CMOS process is illustrated in Fig. 4 . Vbias is provided such that the desired ISource current is supplied to the switching network. All NMOS devices are formed in local p-wells which sit in an isolating deep N-well such that latch-up risk is eliminated. An example of such isolated NMOS transistors in a deep n-well on a p-substrate is illustrated in Fig. 5 . The circuit of Fig. 2 would not work properly without the use of a sophisticated switching network which allows the RMP_L and RMP_R nodes to rise and fall to positive and negative voltages with respect to the common ground.
  • Also the circuit disclosed only makes sense when a single capacitive element is used.
  • The switching network of Fig. 4 of the oscillator allows the RMP_L and RMP_R nodes to rise and fall between V+ and V- (as shown in Fig. 3 ), i.e. positive and negative potentials with respect to ground supply, without causing leakage to substrate or risk of latch-up, i.e. the inadvertent creation of a low-impedance path. The other requirement is that during ϕ1 the RMP_R node is connected to the current source 40 and isolated from all other current paths while the RMP_L node is connected to ground (vss in Fig. 4 ). Furthermore, during ϕ2 the RMP_L node is connected to the current source 40 and isolated from all other current paths while the RMP_R node is connected to ground (vss in Fig. 4 ). The example switching network in Fig. 4 does satisfy these requirements, although it would be possible to envisage a different switching network for this function.
  • In the circuit of Fig. 4 the current source transistor 40 and transistor switches 41, 42, 43 and 44 are PMOS transistors. Transistor switches 45, 46, 47, 48, 49, and 490 are NMOS switches with local p-wells isolated from the chip p-type substrate by an n-well (triple well process) as noted above. It should be noted that the circuit of Fig. 4 is using one current source 40 only.
  • It should be noted that in all illustrated examples, the bulk of any PMOS transistor can either be attached as shown, or can be attached to the positive supply, or any voltage higher than the positive supply.
  • In phase ϕ1 transistor switches 41, 44, 47, and 48 are closed. Transistor switches 42, 43 , 45, and 490 are closed in phase ϕ2. The lines above ϕ1 or ϕ2 in Figs. 4 , and 6a -b refer to the polarity of the signal. Therefore ϕ1 always means that a transistor is closed in phase 1 - if there is a line above the ϕ1 this means the voltage will be low during phase 1 (required to close a PMOS during phase 1), whereas if there is no line above the ϕ1 this means the voltage will be high during phase 1 (required to close an NMOS during phase 1).
  • As noted above it would be possible to envisage a different switching network for the oscillators disclosed function. Figs 6a and 6b show switching networks both also configured to enable low frequency clocks and smaller technology (<250nm) due to lower supply voltage. Both circuits of Figs 6a and 6b are using one current source 40 only and one capacitive element C1 only. The circuit of Fig. 6a has two diodes or other rectifying means 60 and 61.
  • In a preferred embodiment transistor switches 62 and 63 shown in Fig. 6a are NMOS switches having local p-wells isolated from the chip p-type substrate by an n-well (triple well process). It should be noted that the local p-wells may be advantageous in regard of performance but they are not essential to the design of the switching network disclosed. The bulk of NMOS transistor switches 62 and 63 may be each connected to their source or to their substrate. Transistor switches 66 and 67 shown in Fig. 6a are PMOS switches
  • In Fig. 6a the 2 diodes 60 and 61 are used to ensure that significant current does not flow through the body diode of the transistors when RMP_L or RMP_R go negative with respect to VSS.
  • Transistor switches 64, 65, 68 and 69 shown in Fig. 6b are PMOS switches. PMOS transistor switches 64 and 65 may have local n-wells tied to the positive supply V+. Their bulks are connected to V+ (positive supply).
  • The diodes, illustrated with PMOS switches 64 and 65 are parasitic body diodes of the PMOS transistors 64 and 65 that are present in the CMOS process. They were intended/included to show that there is no current path opened when the RMP_L or RMP_R nodes go negative.
  • These PMOS switches 64 and 65 cannot be turned on as efficiently as NMOS transistors (they can only pull RMP_L and RMP_R nodes down to a threshold voltage Vt above VSS) but they guarantee no significant current path through their body diodes when RMP_L or RMP_R nodes go negative with respect to VSS.
  • It should be noted that in in Fig. 6b , the bulk of any PMOS transistor can either be attached as shown, or can be attached to the positive supply, or any voltage higher than the positive supply.
  • Similar to the circuit shown in Fig. 2 is that in the circuits 6a and 6b during first phase ϕ1 the RMP_R node is connected to the current source and isolated from all other current paths while the RMP_L node is connected to ground (vss in Fig. 4 ). Furthermore, during ϕ2 the RMP_L node is connected to the current source 1 and isolated from all other current paths while the RMP_R node is connected to ground (vss in Fig. 4 ).
  • It should be noted that other similar switching networks than shown in Figs. 4 and 6a -6b are conceivable.
  • Summarizing it should be noted that the oscillators illustrated in Fig. 2 , 6a and 6b achieve, compared to the circuit shown in Fig. 1 , a significant reduction in silicon area of capacitive elements, an improved duty-cycle is superior in regard of implementing lower frequency clocks, and is particularly useful for smaller technology nodes (<250nm) due to lower supply voltage.
  • Furthermore the switching networks of the oscillators illustrated in Fig. 4 , 6a and 6b implement a principle of allowing ends of the single capacitor to go temporarily below ground supply. Moreover it should be noted that all components of the oscillators illustrated in Fig. 4 , 6a and 6b may be integrated in one chip.
  • The oscillators illustrated in Fig. 2 , 6a and 6b could be used e.g. for a low frequency oscillator, i.e. low-power mode chip operation, running digital with very slow backup clock to allow shutting down main high-frequency oscillator; or replacing high accuracy quartz oscillator signal in case of external clock supply being removed and main chip still requiring good accuracy clock - possibly 32,768Hz.
  • Fig. 7 illustrates a flowchart of a method to achieve oscillators requiring minimal silicon area and enabled to operate at low frequencies and for small technology nodes. A first step 70 describes the provision of a relaxation oscillator comprising only one capacitive element, a comparator, a logic circuitry, four switching means, connected between a reference voltage and a virtual ground voltage. Step 71 illustrates implementing a switching network allowing nodes at a first and a second terminal of the capacitive element to rise and fall between positive and negative potentials with respect to ground supply, without causing leakage to substrate or risk of latch-up. Step 72 shows starting a first of two symmetrical phases wherein a node at a first terminal of the capacitive element is switched to the virtual ground voltage and a node at a second terminal of the capacitive element is charged to the reference voltage. Step 73 depicts starting a second of the two symmetrical phases when the node at the second terminal of the capacitive element reaches a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage equal to the reference voltage, wherein in the second phase the node at the second terminal is switched to the virtual ground voltage and the node at the first terminal of the capacitive element is charged up to a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage to a potential equal of the reference voltage. Step 74 discloses going back to step 72 when the node of the first terminal reaches the reference voltage with respect to the virtual ground and repeat a cycle of the first and the second phases.
  • While the invention has been particularly shown and described with reference to the preferred embodiments thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in form and details may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.

Claims (19)

  1. A method to achieve CMOS oscillators requiring minimal silicon area and enabled to operate at low frequencies and for small technology nodes comprising the steps of
    (1) providing a relaxation oscillator comprising only one capacitive element, a comparator, a logic circuitry, four switching means, connected between a reference voltage and a virtual ground voltage;
    (2) implementing a CMOS switching network allowing nodes at a first and a second terminal of the capacitive element to rise and fall between positive and negative potentials with respect to ground supply, without causing leakage to substrate or risk of latch-up;
    (3) starting a first of two symmetrical phases wherein a node at a first terminal of the capacitive element is switched to the virtual ground voltage and a node at a second terminal of the capacitive element is charged to the reference voltage;
    (4) starting a second of the two symmetrical phases when the node at the second terminal of the capacitive element reaches a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage equal to the reference voltage, wherein in the second phase the node at the second terminal is switched to the virtual ground voltage and the node at the first terminal of the capacitive element is charged up to a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage to a potential equal of the reference voltage; and
    (5) going back to step (3) when the node of the first terminal reaches the reference voltage with respect to the virtual ground and repeat a cycle of the first and the second phases.
  2. The method of claim 1 wherein a voltage threshold detector switches if an end of the first or the second phase is reached and a logic circuitry is triggered to swap between the two phases.
  3. The method of claim 1 wherein a voltage threshold detector detects when one of the nodes at the terminals of the capacitive elements exceeds a given threshold voltage with respect to voltage VSS.
  4. The method of claim 1 wherein a frequency f of the oscillator is determined by f = I 4 xCxV
    Figure imgb0002

    wherein I is a charging current, C is the total capacitance of the single capacitive element, and V is a voltage at which the capacitive element is considered to be fully charged.
  5. The method of claim 1 wherein at a time immediately before the start of phase one the potential between both nodes equals a difference between the reference voltage and virtual ground and at the start of phase one the node of the first terminal is switched to virtual ground and the charge stored in the capacitive element remains, therefore the potential between the node at the second terminal and virtual ground equals the difference between the reference voltage and virtual ground.
  6. The method of claim 1 wherein a latch-up is eliminated by having all NMOS devices formed in local p-wells, which sit in an isolating deep N-well.
  7. The method of claim 1 wherein the switching network is implemented using NMOS switches, wherein two diodes ensure that no significant current flows through the body diode of the transistors when one of the nodes of the capacitive element goes negative with respect to VSS.
  8. The method of claim 1 wherein the switching network is implemented using PMOS switches.
  9. The method of claim 1 wherein during the first phase the node at the second terminal is connected to the current source and isolated from all other current paths while the node at the first terminal is connected to virtual ground.
  10. The method of claim 1 wherein during the second phase the node at the first terminal is connected to the current source and isolated from all other current paths while the node at the second terminal is connected to virtual ground.
  11. The method of claim 1 wherein the oscillator is used for a low frequency oscillator in a low-power mode chip operation.
  12. The method of claim 1 wherein the switching network is implemented in a triple-well P-substrate CMOS process comprising NMOS switches with local p-wells isolated from the chip p-type substrate by an n-well.
  13. The method of claim 1 wherein the capacitive element is one of the following: - a capacitive element formed by parallel metal plates separated by a dielectric layer of controlled thickness; or
    - a Metal-insulator-Metal (MIM) capacitor; or -- a Metal-Oxide-Metal (MIM) capacitor; or - an external capacitor..
  14. A CMOS relaxation oscillator requiring minimal silicon area and enabled to operate at low frequencies and for small technology nodes below 250 nm, comprising: :
    - one capacitive element only;
    - one current source only wherein a first terminal is connected to VDD voltage and a second terminal is connected to a switching network;
    - a threshold detection unit to determine when a node of the capacitive element exceeds a given threshold voltage;
    - a logic circuitry triggered by the voltage threshold detector to swap between two operation phases; and
    - the switching network to alternate between two phases of operation comprising a number of CMOS switches, wherein the switching network is configured to operate the oscillator in the two phases, where in a first phase a node at a first terminal of the capacitive element is switched to a virtual ground voltage and a node at a second terminal of the capacitive element is charged to a reference voltage, and in a second phase, when the node at the second terminal of the capacitive element reaches a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage equal to the reference voltage, the node at the second terminal is switched to the virtual ground voltage and the node at the first terminal of the capacitive element is charged up to a potential with respect to the virtual ground voltage equal of the reference voltage.
  15. The oscillator of claim 14 wherein the switching network is also configured to allow the nodes of both terminals.to rise and fall between positive and negative potentials with respect to virtual ground.
  16. The oscillator of claim 14 wherein the switch network comprises:
    - a first PMOS transistor of the number of PMOS transistors, wherein a source is connected to VDD voltage, a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry, and a drain is connected to a drain of first NMOS transistor of the number of NMOS transistors and to a gate of a second NMOS transistor, wherein a bulk could be connected the source, to VDD voltage or to a voltage higher than VDD voltage;
    - the first NMOS transistor, wherein a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry, a source is connected to the node of the first terminal of the capacitive element, to a drain of a second PMOS transistor, to a bulk and to a source of a second NMOS transistor;
    - the second NMOS transistor wherein a drain is connected to a drain of a third NMOS transistor:
    - the third NMOS transistor, wherein a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry and a source is connected to a bulk and to virtual ground;
    - the second PMOS transistor, wherein a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry a source is connected to a bulk, to the second terminal of the current source and to a source of a third PMOS transistor, wherein a bulk could be connected to the source , to VDD voltage or to a voltage higher than VDD voltage;
    - the third PMOS transistor, wherein a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry and a drain is connected to a node of the second terminal of the capacitive element and a bulk could be connected to the source , to VDD voltage or to a voltage higher than VDD voltage;
    - a fourth PMOS transistor, wherein a source is connected to VDD voltage, a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry, and a drain is connected to a drain of fourth NMOS transistor and to a gate of a fifth NMOS transistor, wherein a bulk could be connected the source, to VDD voltage or to a voltage higher than VDD voltage;
    - the fourth NMOS transistor, wherein a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry, a source is connected to the node of the second terminal of the capacitive element, to a drain of the third PMOS transistor, to a bulk and to a source of a fifth NMOS transistor;
    - the fifth NMOS transistor wherein a drain is connected to a drain of a sixth NMOS transistor; and
    - the sixth NMOS transistor, wherein a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry and a source is connected to a bulk and to virtual ground.
  17. The oscillator of claim 14 wherein the switch network comprises:
    - a first PMOS transistor of the number of PMOS transistors, wherein a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry, a source is connected to the second terminal of the current source, and to a source of a second PMOS transistor, and a drain is connected to the node of the first terminal of the capacitive element and to an anode of a first rectifying means, wherein a bulk is connected the source, to VDD voltage or to a voltage higher than VDD voltage;
    - the first rectifying means wherein a cathode is connected to a drain of a first NMOS transistor of the number of NMOS transistors;
    - the first NMOS transistor, wherein a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry, a source is connected to virtual ground, and a bulk is connected to the source or to a substrate;
    - the second PMOS transistor, wherein a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry, the source is connected to a bulk, a drain is connected to the node of the second terminal of the current source, and to an anode of a second rectifying means;
    - the second rectifying means wherein a cathode is connected to a drain of a second NMOS transistor; and
    - the second NMOS transistor, wherein a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry, a source is connected to virtual ground, and a bulk is connected to the source or to a substrate.
  18. The oscillator of claim 17 wherein said rectifying means are diodes.
  19. The oscillator of claim 14 wherein the switch network comprises:
    - a first PMOS transistor of the number of PMOS transistors, wherein a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry, a source is connected to the second terminal of the current source, and to a source of a second PMOS transistor, and a drain is connected to the node of the first terminal of the capacitive element, and to the first terminal of a second PMOS transistor of the number of PMOS transistors, wherein a bulk is connected the source, to VDD voltage or to a voltage higher than VDD voltage;
    - the second PMOS transistor, wherein a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry, a source is connected to the second terminal of the current source, and to a source of the first PMOS transistor, and a drain is connected to the node of the second terminal of the capacitive element, and to the first terminal of a third PMOS transistor of the number of PMOS transistors, wherein a bulk is connected the source, to VDD voltage, or to a voltage higher than VDD voltage;
    - the third PMOS transistor, wherein the first terminal is connected to the drain of the first PMOS transistor, the second terminal is connected to virtual ground, a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry, and the bulk is connected to VDD voltage, or to a voltage higher than VDD voltage;
    - the fourth PMOS transistor, wherein the first terminal is connected to the drain of the second PMOS transistor, the second terminal is connected to virtual ground, a gate is controlled by the logic circuitry, and the bulk is connected to VDD voltage, or to a voltage higher than VDD voltage.
EP12368029.0A 2012-10-02 2012-10-02 Area efficient single capacitor CMOS relaxation oscillator Withdrawn EP2717468A1 (en)

Priority Applications (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP12368029.0A EP2717468A1 (en) 2012-10-02 2012-10-02 Area efficient single capacitor CMOS relaxation oscillator
US13/644,490 US8970313B2 (en) 2012-10-02 2012-10-04 Area efficient single capacitor CMOS relaxation oscillator

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
EP12368029.0A EP2717468A1 (en) 2012-10-02 2012-10-02 Area efficient single capacitor CMOS relaxation oscillator

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
EP2717468A1 true EP2717468A1 (en) 2014-04-09

Family

ID=47326033

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
EP12368029.0A Withdrawn EP2717468A1 (en) 2012-10-02 2012-10-02 Area efficient single capacitor CMOS relaxation oscillator

Country Status (2)

Country Link
US (1) US8970313B2 (en)
EP (1) EP2717468A1 (en)

Families Citing this family (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
KR101365362B1 (en) * 2012-12-27 2014-02-24 삼성전기주식회사 Average current controller, average current control method and buck converter using the average current controller
US8933737B1 (en) * 2013-06-28 2015-01-13 Stmicroelectronics International N.V. System and method for variable frequency clock generation
US9742353B2 (en) * 2015-06-22 2017-08-22 Avago Technologies General Ip (Singapore) Pte. Ltd. CMOS VCO with implicit common-mode resonance
KR101879830B1 (en) * 2017-06-16 2018-07-19 성균관대학교산학협력단 Flipflop and driving method thereof
US10690708B2 (en) * 2018-08-28 2020-06-23 Psemi Corporation Differential Phase and amplitude detector

Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0180084A2 (en) * 1984-10-27 1986-05-07 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Voltage controlled oscillator
DE10158113A1 (en) * 2001-11-27 2003-06-05 Texas Instruments Deutschland RC oscillator circuit has several switches controled by comparator output signal to change connections of capacitor to current source and discharge potential
US20070170516A1 (en) * 2006-01-26 2007-07-26 International Business Machines Corporation Triple-well cmos devices with increased latch-up immunity and methods of fabricating same
US20080204155A1 (en) * 2007-02-28 2008-08-28 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Oscillator devices and methods thereof

Family Cites Families (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3702446A (en) * 1971-09-07 1972-11-07 Rca Corp Voltage-controlled oscillator using complementary symmetry mosfet devices
US4904960A (en) 1989-04-10 1990-02-27 National Semiconductor Corporation Precision CMOS oscillator circuit
US5497127A (en) 1994-12-14 1996-03-05 David Sarnoff Research Center, Inc. Wide frequency range CMOS relaxation oscillator with variable hysteresis
US5654677A (en) 1996-06-24 1997-08-05 Ericsson Inc. Relaxation oscillator of reduced complexity using CMOS equivalent of a four-layer diode
JP3607094B2 (en) * 1998-09-10 2005-01-05 シャープ株式会社 Synchronous oscillation circuit
US6720836B2 (en) 2001-12-14 2004-04-13 Elantec Semiconductor, Inc. CMOS relaxation oscillator circuit with improved speed and reduced process/temperature variations
JP2005117140A (en) 2003-10-03 2005-04-28 Nec Electronics Corp Oscillation circuit and semiconductor integrated circuit provided with same
JP2011223829A (en) 2010-04-14 2011-11-04 Rohm Co Ltd Control circuit for negative voltage charge pump circuit, negative voltage charge pump circuit, and electronic device and audio system each employing them
JP5814542B2 (en) * 2010-12-06 2015-11-17 株式会社東芝 Oscillator circuit

Patent Citations (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0180084A2 (en) * 1984-10-27 1986-05-07 Kabushiki Kaisha Toshiba Voltage controlled oscillator
DE10158113A1 (en) * 2001-11-27 2003-06-05 Texas Instruments Deutschland RC oscillator circuit has several switches controled by comparator output signal to change connections of capacitor to current source and discharge potential
US20070170516A1 (en) * 2006-01-26 2007-07-26 International Business Machines Corporation Triple-well cmos devices with increased latch-up immunity and methods of fabricating same
US20080204155A1 (en) * 2007-02-28 2008-08-28 Freescale Semiconductor, Inc. Oscillator devices and methods thereof

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US8970313B2 (en) 2015-03-03
US20140091870A1 (en) 2014-04-03

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US8610509B2 (en) Flexible low current oscillator for multiphase operations
US9857813B2 (en) Methods and apparatus for low input voltage bandgap reference architecture and circuits
US7733191B2 (en) Oscillator devices and methods thereof
US8970313B2 (en) Area efficient single capacitor CMOS relaxation oscillator
US10032106B2 (en) Temperature-compensated oscillator
US20070001743A1 (en) Utilization of device types having different threshold voltages
US20070001746A1 (en) Selectably boosted control signal based on supply voltage
KR101504587B1 (en) Negative supply voltage generating circuit and semiconductor integrated circuit having the same
US4837466A (en) Delay circuit
Asano et al. A 1.66-nW/kHz, 32.7-kHz, 99.5 ppm/° C fully integrated current-mode RC oscillator for real-time clock applications with PVT stability
US9912325B2 (en) Power supply voltage detection and power delivery circuit
EP3154199B1 (en) A new power-on reset circuit
JP3549186B2 (en) Semiconductor device
US11695010B2 (en) Semiconductor device
JP2001358567A (en) Semiconductor integrated circuit
KR100883791B1 (en) High voltage generator and low voltage generator for driving gate line
CN114640324A (en) Low-power-consumption periodic pulse generation circuit
US20190190500A1 (en) Control circuit for transistor biasing
KR100909837B1 (en) Unit charge pump
KR20160025520A (en) Delay circuit, oscillation circuit, and semiconductor device
TWI757375B (en) Monitoring circuit and method
Antonescu A 1.2 V Core Switched Geometry Schmitt Trigger Relaxation Oscillator
Lee Implementations of Low-Power uProcessor System for Miniaturized IoT Applications
US20100231273A1 (en) Semiconductor device
JPWO2004030191A1 (en) Semiconductor integrated circuit device

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
PUAI Public reference made under article 153(3) epc to a published international application that has entered the european phase

Free format text: ORIGINAL CODE: 0009012

AK Designated contracting states

Kind code of ref document: A1

Designated state(s): AL AT BE BG CH CY CZ DE DK EE ES FI FR GB GR HR HU IE IS IT LI LT LU LV MC MK MT NL NO PL PT RO RS SE SI SK SM TR

AX Request for extension of the european patent

Extension state: BA ME

17P Request for examination filed

Effective date: 20141009

RBV Designated contracting states (corrected)

Designated state(s): AL AT BE BG CH CY CZ DE DK EE ES FI FR GB GR HR HU IE IS IT LI LT LU LV MC MK MT NL NO PL PT RO RS SE SI SK SM TR

17Q First examination report despatched

Effective date: 20180321

STAA Information on the status of an ep patent application or granted ep patent

Free format text: STATUS: THE APPLICATION IS DEEMED TO BE WITHDRAWN

18D Application deemed to be withdrawn

Effective date: 20200603